The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, December 29, 1903, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

th 1 1 RO AVENGERS. THE SAN ERANCISCO CALL, TUESDAY, DE! CEMBER 29, 1903. S NECROES | cressman Induces a Bluffs Mok te Give s for a Lynching R I\lopl\ ORDER | .. Lawmaker Pleads W \ngered Crowd After Is Down Battered Joor m.“., coal for the fleet. ASHINGTON, Dec. ama will be reinforced The gunboat Topeka, 1 as convoy of the torpedo-destroyers at Colon vesterday from Philadelphia. The conver On the Pacific Coast the gunboat Petrel, bound for a marine brigade. 'ADMIRAL COGHLAN’S FLAGSHIP VISITS THE COLOMBIAN PORT OF CARTAGENA |Cruiser Olympia, Sent to Convey Minister Beaupre to Colon, Anchors in Harbor and American Naval| Officers Land to Pay Their Respects to Governor 28 —The fleets of warships on botl shortly by several vessels now of the Atlantic training squadron, Fruxtun and Stewart. The big collier Caesar has r Dixie left League Isla ted crui on their way left Key 1 sides of the isthmus of Pan- to that' quarter. West terday for The gunboat Castine arrived left Culebra for Colon with nd to-day for Colon with the anama, arrived | i | { LOWER WAGES FOR NEW YEAR Announcements of Reductions Multiply in the Industrial Centers of the Eastern States TEEL PLANTS TO REOPEN o el Amalgamated Association in| Pittsburg District Accepts Ten Per Cent Cut in Men's Pay el ST PITTSBURG, Pa., Dec. 28.—Notices | were sent out to-day from the head- quarters of the Amalgamated Associa- tion of Iron, Steel and Tin Workers DR. KILMER'S SWAMP-ROOT. ARE YOUR KIDNEYS WEAK? Thousands of Men and Women Have Kid- ney Trouble and Never Suspect It. To Prove What the Great Kldney Remedy, Swamp-Root, Will Do for YOU, Every Reader of The Call May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Absolutely Free by Mail. Tt used to be considered that only urinary and bladder troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, but now modern science proves that ncarly all diseases have (heir beginning in the disorder of these most important organs. The kidneys filter and purify the blood— that is their work. Therefore, when your kidneys are weak or out of order, you can understatnd hor quick- ly your entire body is affected, and how ev- Acapulco, Mexico, on the 26th inst. The flagship New York sailed from San Francisco to- and the gunboat Bennington, the torpedo-hoat destroyers Preble and Paul Jones and the | that the vote of the sheet lodges on i the proposition to reduce the base of | the wage scale 10 per cent had been ery organ ‘seems to fail to do its duty. If you are sick or “feel badly.” begin taking the great kidney remedy, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- o men_ and next Monday of a large number of was stan and de- | COLON, Dec. 25.—Admiral Coghlan's | barked, the Olympia fired a governor's | entertain hope 0f a satistactory re-|ut® JT00CEY OF o rBC O e raans of ot L o & U ber o Taer th : surrend- | flagship, the cruiser Olympia, arrived | salute of seventeen guns and imme- |sponse by this Government. Already' Tdlator = oas tow quent desire to urinate, but after using Dr. Xil- e of mand Was | 4. this afternoon from Cartagena, | diately thereafter hoisted anchor andmost of the legation files have been | PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 28.—A red: mer’'s Swamp-: I am entirely and cheer- I e ooy EVTRBGTIEEY e 0 MIhIster kg ’ewamed out of the lagoon. | packed and arrangements completed ! A, Dec. 28.—A reduc: recommend this wonderful remedy to any re le 1990 { PEREINE A 2 BUPKE: °! " While Admiral Coghlan and the|for placing them in storage here. Gen- | tion in wages at the American Bridge | who may suffer from these common complaints. m = t the jail | Colombia, and Mrs. Beaupre. Mr. and | other Americ were treated civilly | eral Reyes for several days has denied | Company’s works went into effect to- | Most ruly ’0 BAILY. 24 Lieut. of !oueo. 8 s ”"*_“”_"" Mrs. Be e arrived at Cartagena from | and eourtcously, and while their visit| himself to callers. It is believed that, | day. The plece workers were reduced w- ' Columbus, Ga. break it ug ney. went’ | Bosots last Rasurdhy, and Doflx 3l $he | tras o ked by the slightest un-, while the reply of Hay has not been g per cent; salaries below $4000 a year | Weak and unhealthy kidrieys are responsible week. — - The . 4 evident that the authorities in Carta- il y . L iron, T ”’";'"’:d'am‘ Ta':ed' zena were not very glad to see the | tivesddn the interviews they have had | $4000 and $10,000 25 per cent. *Two thou- | to continue much suffering and fatal results araah b g o seaupre will sail | ()0 and were pleased when she | with $he Secretary to enable them to |Sand men are affected. are sure to follow. Kidney trouble irritates 1 yell | for New York on the steamer Yucatan | " 0 “q0na riure. forecast its conclusions. PITTSBURG, Pa., Dec. 28.—The em- | the nerves, makes you dizzy. restless cleep- te-morrow The rece; arrived Olympia on he a 3 e - 0 I 8 Q - o~ B S o o o arrival yesterday aft- )n of the Olympia at Car the nce rto Carta- ried the Colom- Olympia f Cartagena, four miles dis- | .cted the Bogota Govérn-|ficial communication of Hay setting Uary L. i omp: S king every effort to reach the in -Cartagena, who | forth the reasons why this Government | is confected with the Carnegie Steel | and muscles; makes your head ache and back e step and to pass into the lagoon | watc hing for any evi-|cannot accept their view of the Pan-|Company and is a a}ubsidlary of the| sche, causes indigestion, stomach and liver ¢ y of the Olympia, which she suc- | alty, since the Capta- | ama situation before severing diplo-| United States Steel Corporation. trouble, you get a sallow, yellew complex- s s < led in doing. } evidently desired to | matic relations with the Inited States. | TRENTON, N. J., Dec., 28.—The re-| ;o " lyes voy feel as though you had heart = 1 1 he Olympia steamed slowly to the | avoid all unnecessary friendliness with| The statement of M. Bunau-Varilla, | duction of wages at the Trenton plant bl F ymy ¥ ¥ i nt H 5 t Bri C - | trouble; you may have plenty of ambition, but « t us entrance between two old i he Americans. ‘thn Panama Minister, that his Govern- url ‘the American dl dge nnmpur;y, g strenéth' Si6 i and waste. Shey ish forts, ch apparently were ) politica erences were made | ment is willing to assume a portion of | Which was announced some time ago, ; : s D el ¥ 4 The reduction The cure for these troubles is Dr. Kilmer's Colonist e showing r ng wi street § rtained of Dr. and a bag of were dis- efreshments we ude Byrne. Winning the Fight for Life. v ble and the t universal, it fol- ss of the e unsatisfac- the aver- wants of m sickness for ed years, and the until old it ever it mer weavily be of the age. the d the rest in They accuse s of groping more or less h for means of sick and suf- yielding to death as their prede- before. Some- claimed . that under of science th to last ations mina of mankind s it is good to con- o jonally the immense and £ made by preventive and | tive s places and under con- s permitting exact measurement differences. Now and then dvised and directed by the of the times result rtely ates that there is absolut: for questioning the import- progress made in the bat fe and health.—Cleveland ———————— In the absence of horses both a plow and a mower were used tied behind his | utom by Mr. Raser, an Ohio farmer machine w fast to g the ADVERTISEMENTS. No soap in all the world is so cheap. No soap in all the world is so good—none so-lasting. ooul all over lhcwufl. Honesty is the easiest policy ing’s Best has made it 0. Moneyback, medical | modern doctors | is in such cutting down of | d, and found that the Colombian r had taken up a position a short e inside, but commanding . the 1t was learned subsequently “artagena had grounded there er she was towed into port. XCHANGED. ¥ passed the Colombian hips and proceeded to Cartagena, ight miles from the entrance. a mile from the town, >d the Colombian flag red a salute of twen- thereafter the Co- at the edge of the town bian battery nsul Orr, but it was learned had left Cartagena about a fortnight ago for Barranquilla. The British Vice Consul at Cartagena, who the afternoon, accompanied G. Colby. Both officers -re in full dress uniform. A big crowd gathered at the docks to meet Admiral Coghlan and Captain Colby, and it si- lently followed the carriage containing the pfficers. through the streets to the patoe, where another big crowd as- bled. g nor Insignares; surrounded ser of secretaries and aids. iral Coghlan®in the large he did in y Captain H. yver rge num eived Adr Coghlan and Governor In- exchanged the regulation for- , the crowd listening attentiv Governor said he would r the visit immediately, whereupon Admiral Coghlan and party returned ) the Olympia. NO DISPLAY OF HOSTILITY. The offic were in no way molested or annoyed by the crowd, which fol- | Jowed them closely all the time. Neither by words nor looks did the populace splay any hostility. The Colombian battery d a rear adm ral's salute as Admiral (ughl’\n dre off for the Olympia. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon Gov- ernor Insignares, accompanied by numerous retinue, boarded the Olym pia for the return visit and remained a turned the salute. } Coghlan then sent a_ bpat to communicate with United | is very sick and is not expected to live, bad undertaken to look after the ed States’ interests pending the s successor. | hlan then arranged to an official visit to Dr. Jose Insig- , the Governor of Bolivar, which ple untoward incident, it was ant Admiral Coghlan was careful to leave the earliest possible moment, evi- ntly membering the absolute loy- aity of tment of Bolivar to sota Government. ring the interviews, except by the | chief of the Cartagena customs, who, | while aboard the Olympia, proposed ith reat earnestness a toast to the |'continuance of the frierfdly relations tween the United Statcs and Colom- bia. | CONCENTRATI OF TROOPS. | Comparatively little information as| to the general situaton could be gained rtagena. . There are probably | roops there, and there are report- | to be 5000 at Barranquilla. The{ rnment is doubtless slowly con-| ing troops at Barranquilla mld ng them toward Titumali, in smal There Colomb m ers at Titumali nity to-day | { and this number is gradually being in- | ased. ‘Minister | Beaupre had a good trip| dalena River and was| atly gratified to find that the Olym- a had been sent to Cartagena to bring | him to Colon. The Bogotan author ties extended every courtesy to the Minister, who left Bogota on a special train and w carried down the river| {on a special steam He made the| trip (1.‘\m Bogota to Cartagena in seven | da Beaupre said he thought any trouble | between the United States and Colom- | bia was improbable and that the Amer- icans in Colombia—of whom there were very few, there being only about ten in gota and some prospectors in An- | tioguia and other places—were in mno danger of molestation. General Rafacl Reyes has been bitter- Iy criticized in Bogota for having in- vited the Panaman commissioners to breakfast when here aboard the Canda. | The General's action is considered un- | dignified and a sign of weakness, Gen- g 1wed absence at Wash- ington ting In a certain slight weakening of his influence and pr tige. It can be safely said that the influ-| ence of time and a calmer considera- | tion of the situation are bringing about, though slowly, a greater readi- <s on the part of Colombia to ac-| he inevitable and to get all she pe : can from the republic of Pan- ama by dinlomac; JINGTON, Dec. 28.—Although ; Hay has not yet replied to the note of General Reyes, m'ur!ar.’lli()nsl are going on rapidly for the closing of the Colombian legation here and the | nington will supply the destr. o made, sufficient information has been obtained by the Colombian representa- The preparaions going on for closing the affairs of the legation would seem to indicate that General Reyes and Dr. Herran are awaiting, as a. matter of | the Colombian ‘debt, has been received | at the British embassy and transmitted by cahle to the London Government for | its consideration. e Dixie Sails With Marines. PHILADELPHIA, Dec. —The auxiliary cruiser Dixie salled from the | League Island navy vard to-day, en route to Colon, carrying 600 marines and five months’ living and fighting supplies for 1000 men. Six companies of imarines, divided into two battal- ions, sailed on the Dixie. Company A is composed of men from Boston; Company B, Washington; Company C, | Annapolis; Company D, Philadelphia, and Companies E and F, Brooklyn. —_— CRUISER NEW YORK SAILS. Passes Through the Golden Gate En Route to the Isthmus. The United States cruiser New York, Captain Hunker commanding, in first- class tfim for any duty occasion may require her day for Panama, where she will be | used by Rear Admiral Henry Glass as his flagship. The final preparations for. sea kept all hands busy .during the early morning and forenoon and steam cutters and pulling boats loaded with stores ‘kept up for several hours an animated procession between the Clay street boat landing and ‘the cruiser. By noon, however, the last of the slures were on board, boats were hoisted and secured, the anchor hove short and !he. cruiser was ready for sea. she got un- | der way a little later and at 2 o'clock passed out through the Golden Gate. The gunboat Bennington came down | from the navy yard early yesterday morning and is anchor oft Folsom street, awaiting the arrival from the East of some belated officers who have been ordered to join her for the voyage to the isthmus. It is expected that she will be able to get away to-day. The Bennington will convoy the tor- pedo-boat destroyers Preble. and Paul Jones, which are now at Mare Island ready to start. The gunboat and her fleet little wards will call at San Diego, Pichilinaue and apulco to replenish the small boats’ coal supply. Other stops may be made, but if the weather permits the Ben- s with such coal as they need after leaving Acapulco in order to save the high price that would have to be paid at for fifteen minutes. When the Gov- | departure of Colombi representatives | Corinto and other Central American |the court. “It has always been the ernor and his retinué ere disem-|for home. It is clear that they do not| ports. law of the land and it always will be.” | i ———————— i = 8 ; ~* | AMERICANS TO CONSTRUCT RICHARD STEVENSON MAY TAKES UP THE DUTIES VICTORIA FALLS BRIDGE SOON SUCCEED SCHWERIN Manager of Southern Pacific Purchas- ing Department Preparing to.Re- linquish the Position. The employves of the Southern Pa- cific Company are looking forward to the announcement in a few days of the retirement of R. P. Schwerin from the position of manager of the pur- and supply department of that corporation. With his new duties as general manager of the Portland and Asiatic Steamship Company, which were imposed on him two weeks ago by E. H. Harriman, and his spoysibilities as vice president and general manager of the Pacific Mail | Steamship Company, Mr. Schwerin is aid to have concluded to sever con- ctions with the railroad corpora- ! tion. 2 | © As a matter of fdcl the office of | manager of the purchasing and sup- ply department of the Southern Pa- | cific is no longer the inviting position of several years ago, for it has been | made subordinate to the place recént chasing | ly created in Chicago for Harriman's | friend, W. 8. V. Thorne, jvho has been given the title of director of purchases | of the Harriman lines. . Through the latter’s office all purchases of material for the Harriman Mnes are to be made hereafter, l izing the different roads is completed. | Mr. Schwerin does not take kindly to llh" proposition of dividing responsi- bilities with some one else and it is | sald that this fact has had some in- | fluence in his determination to give up -his present position with the Southern Pacific Company. Speculation over his probable suc- cessor in the purchasing and supply department of the road centers around Richard Stevenson, who has been Manger Schwerin’s assistant for a number of years and was lnnn?(’!ed with the department when the' latter assumed charge of it, —_———————— Passes Worthless Check. | Charles S. Warner, 510 Mission | street, secured a warrant from Police | Judge Fritz yesterday for the arrest lur George B. Sweger on a charge of attering and passing a fictitious check. Sweger.got $10 from Warner on De- cember 19 and handed Warner -a check for that amount on the Crocker- Woolworth Bank signed “A. D. Wil- son.” No such person had an account at the bank. Kansas City alone has $30,000,000 in- vested in Mexico. ‘hen the work of standard- | EASTERN GIRL COMES WEST TO WED PHYSICIAN —— A wedding is on the cards for Thurs- day night that will come as a pleasant surprise to the younger members of the smart set, when D{. A. D. Prentice will take unto himself a bride, Miss Florence Long, an Eastern girl of much beauty and social prominence. And therein lies a tale of a wedding hast- ened by the stern demands of duty. ! Dr. Prentice has for three years been practicing in the Philippines, where he | has achieved a splendid reputation. Re- turning to this city on a visit to his | mother, Mrs. H. C. Botsford, he jour- neyed to New York to spend some time in the Gotham hospitals, and it was during this sojourn that the young physician lost his heart. A few day$ ago peremptory orders arrived from Manila summoning him | back to his post. There was much use made of the wires that stretch away to Gotham, and the result is that the wed- ding day was named and the fair bride is now speeding on her way to this city. It is expected that Miss Long will ar- rive this evening, when she will be greeted by the family of the groom. The wedding will necessarily be a very quiet affair and will be witnessed only by members of the family. It is sincerely to be regretted that so little time will elapse between the coming and going of the fair bride, as it is cer-| tain that many courtesies would have been extended to her. The Pacific Coast Women's Press As- sociation met yesterday at Centui Hall, and a programme that bore breath of Christmastide was presented. The following numbers were splendidly rendered: Song, “A Christmas Morn,” dedicated to the P. C. W. P. A., words by Mrs. Rose L. Bushnell Donnelly, music by Charles Alberts, Mrs. C. E. Bower, soloist; short story, Mrs. J. J. Owen; song, Miss Millie Flynd. Mrs. Pinney, the president, received the guests at’ the completion of the pro- gramme, and a delighiful hour was spent over the tea cups, The Teachers’ Club is extendlns a charming hospitality to visiting teach- ers in the clubrooms in the City Hall, room , where day and night the latchstring hangs without. The follow- ing preside: Mrs. E. M. North, Miss M. | Spedding. OF HIS POST ONCE MORE General MacArthur Spends Day Ex- amining New Pacific Division and Department Commands. General MacArthur had. a busy day yvesterday. He has been away from his post for a menth and a large pile of work had accumulated for his in- spection and supervision. His atten- tion was largely occupied with look- ing into the new division and depart- ment commands, which will go into effect January 15, 1904. The Pacific division will then embrace the De- partment of California and the De- partment-of the Columbia, with head- quarters at San Francisco. The Department of California in- cludes the, States of California and Nevada and the Hawaiian Islands and their dependencies. The Department of the Columbia includes the States of Washington, Oregon and Idaho (except that part included in the Yel- lowstone National Park) and the Ter- ritory of Alaska: headquarters at Vancouver Barracks, Wash. In other words, ,the Pacific division embraces the entire territory known as the Pa- cific Coast possessions of the United States, with lhe Hawailan Islands added. General MacArthur is appointed to command the Paciflc division and will temporarily be in command of the Department of California. Brigadier General Funston will remain in com- mand of the Department of the Co- lumbia until the new order goes into effect. The departure of the Eleventh Cav- alry from Manila for the United States depends entirely on the arrival there of the Second Cavalry, which goes out to relieve the first named regi- ment. A portion of the Second Cav- alry sailed for the Philippines on the transport Kilpatrick from New York on the 20th inst. and the remainder will go on the Thomas, leaving this port on January 1. When they ar- rive at Manila the Eleventh will sail for home. - “The- Twenty-seventh Infantry, now stationed in the Philippines, is sched- uled to leave Manila on January 15 for the United States. — e Sunday School Festival. St. Francis Sunday School festival will be held in Washington Square | accepted. [ form and diplomatic courtesy, the of- | duction in wages, to take place on Jan to perform, sailed yester- | The new rate will go lnlo’ effect on January 1, and it is belleved this decision will result in the starting | were reduced 20 per.cent, and between ployes of the Union Rallroad Company, ‘with the exception of the trainmen, have been notified of a 10 per cent re The Union Railroad Company went into effect to-day. is a graded one, running from 1 to 20 per cent. The 1 per cent reduction is |in the case of men who receive less | than $1 50 per day. Those who receive jabove that amcunt have been reduced \from 10 to 20 per cent. The men have | submitted to the reduction. Several hundred employes are affected. HICAGO, Dec. 28.—The bloomin and open hearth mills at the Inland Steel Company, Indlan Harbor, were lrunnlng with union men to-day for the first time in nearly two months. Of | the 900 men, members of the Amalga- | mated Iron, Steel and Tin Workers’ | Union, who struck because of a_de- | | crease In wages. about 400 were put | back at work and the remainder expect | to be at their old stations to-morrow. | They go back at a reduction of 10 per cent. LONDON, Dec. 28.—Three lhousan\il | blast furnace workers in this district | were to-day given notice of a pro- posed reduction cf 10 per cent in wages, to take effect on January 1. NEWCASTLE, Pa., Dec. 28.—The manager of the Newcastle and Sharon | Plants of the Carnegie Steel Company | announces that the 1300 furnacemen | of this city and all furnacemen of the | | Shenango Valley will be affected by |a general wage reduction, effective January 1. e | STRIKERS DENIED APPEAL. Heavv Penalty Imposed Upon Union Men Who Violated an Injunction. NEW YORK, Dec. 28.—Vice Chan- cellor Pitney denied an appeal for | mercy in Jersey City to-day for the | strikers of the Frank & Dugan silk ! mills in Paterson, including two men ,.md six girls, who were found guilty of contempt of court by him in the summer ot 1901. The contempt lay in the disregard of the court’s injunction forbidding the strikers frominterfering with the employes of Frank & Dugan, or to “make it uncomfortable” for those who desired to work. The case was carried to the Court of Appeals and the United States Su- preme Court, which held that it had no jurisdiction. An appeal was then | made unsuccessfully to the Court of q 1 | | Pardons. | _ The defendants also were ordered by the Chancery Court to pay costs amounting to $540. The court re- |iterated with emphasis that it is illegal to make it ‘“‘uncomfortable” for any- ! body who wishes to work. | _ “That is the law of the land,” said Will Be 420 Feet Above Water Level and the Highest in the World. In reference to the steel girder bridga | which {s to span the Zambesi below the | Victoria Falls, the following facts are | attributed to George C. Imbault of the i Cleveland Bridge and Engineering Com. | pany of Darlington, the firm that has the contract: The final length of the | bridge will be 650 feet, and this result coincides closely with the length meas- | ured two years ago. There will be three | spans—two short ones of unequa| length and the big central or main span | of 500 feet. The southern span will be 871 feet and the northern cne 6215 feet. A rough measurement, it 1s worth not- ing, was calculated from rail level to water level, and this was found to be 420 feet. This may be called low water level, as the river is about at its lowest in August, and high water level will be about forty feet higher, or 380 feet. This measurement will make the bridge the highest in the world, the nearest to- it being the Viaduct du Viaur, in France, which is just finished and is 375 feet | above the bottom of the valley it crosses. The width of the bridge wlll} be thirty feet, sufficient for a double | line of rails. The erection of the bridge will take place simultaneously from hoth sides of the river, the weight being carried hy steel cables untfl the two halves of the central span abut and are connected. The structure, the total weig] of | which will be 1600 tons of steel, is near- 1y finished in England now, and will be shipped about December. As soon us the raflway construction reaches the falls construction will commence, and | this is expected to be about May 1 of | next year. During its erection a cable- way will be arranged for the purpose of passing across matetial required for the bridge, and alsb for conveying rail- way material reeded for the line north of the river.—Engineering. —e—————— Lutheran Celebration. The First English Lutheran S\md:fi- school, Geary street, near Octavia, l give its annual Christmas tree enter- tainment to-morrow evening at 7:45 o'clock. A pleasing programme has Hall, corner of Union and Stockton | been arranged and all the friends of streets, to-night. An excellent pro- gramme has been arranged and a good time is expected. On the pro- Minghan, A. L. Mann and Mrs. K. L. | gramme are W. Hynes and the ““won- | in wood and leather. der wizard,” O. Wanek the Sunday-school are invited. —————————— Pyrw‘ry outfits and things to burn Art material da- plmnnt. Sanborn, Vail & Co. Roog. because as soon as your kidneys are getting better they will help all the other or- ganr to health. A trial will convince any one. for many kinds of diseases, and if permitted less and irritable. Makes you pass vater often during the day and obliges you to get up many times during the night. Unhealthy kid- neys cause rheumatism, gravel, catarrk of the bladder, pain or, dull ache in the back, joints Swamp-Root, the world-farious kidney reme- dy. In taking Swamp-Root you afford natural help to Nature, for Swamp-Root is the most perfect healer and gentle aid to the kidneys that is known to medical science. How to Find Out If there is any doubt in your mind as to ur condition, take from your urine on. ris- | g about four ounces,place it in a glass or | chase bottle and let ‘it stand twenty-four hours. 1f on examination it is milky or cloudy, if there (Swamp-Root is pleasant to take.) If | vinced that Swamp-Root is you are already con- what you need, you can pur- the regular fifty-cent and one-dollar - size bottles is a brick-dust settling, or if small particles | at the drug stores every- float about in it, your kidneys are in need of | p. . Dot maké any mis- immediate attention. | . Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and is used | take, but remember. the in the leading hospitals, recommended by | name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kil- physicians in their private practice, and is | S taken by doctors themselves who -have kid- | mer's Swamp-Root, and the ney ailments, because they recognize in it the | greatest and most successful remedy for kid- ney, liver and bladder troubles. | on every bottle. EDITORIAL NOTE—You may have a sample bottle of this wonder- ful remedy, Swamp-Root, sent absolutely free by mail, also a book telling all about Swamp-Root and containing many of the thousands upon thou- sands of testimonial letters received from mer and women who owe their good health, in fact their very lives, to the great curative properties of Swamp-Root. In writing to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y.. be sure to say you read this generous offer in The San Francisco Daily Call JAPANESE PLAY -WINS LONDON address Binghamton, N. Y., | play closely follows the version pre= | sented in New* York, except that the magnifl(vm scenery and the general ac- cessories surpass the American produc- tion. Miss Lena Ashwell as Yo San further | added” to her histrionic laureis and | made her portrayal the success of the \n\"mng At the final curtain there David Belasco s Produetion | were loud calls for a speech, but when Tree tried to respond there was such a May Prove Greatest Success tumult in the gallery, which now op- > | peses ail speeches at London theaters. 3 Enelis e 11 at he could not get a hearing beyond in English Theatricals saying that he wished to convey the —— ,{l:;v:xo(t] m: ‘?fi' ess;;lt “The D‘:Il:n‘,\"‘ LONDON, Dec. 28.—David Belasco's | e wher O Sl O . lant y - Japanese play, “The Darling of the d:':,,t,,‘ P whedy Ne Was iy, Gods,” which was produced at His | —_————— Majesty's Theater to-night by Beer-| The American investment in religious bohm Tree before a distinguished audi- | and educational institutions in Turkey ence that filled every part of the house, | is $6,500,000, and more than $20,000,000 promises to be the greatest success yet | have been spent in mission work, cov- achieved in London theatricals. The | ering nearly a century. ADVERTISEMENTS. R e e S SR S s Bk ‘Suits to Measure Start the new year with a new suit. We make suits to order in all styles from the latest fabrics, and the prices range from $10.00 to $45.00. Our saits are as good in fit. and workmanship as those of the exclusive tailor, who charges you fully a third more. If you live out of G N . 3 ezl SNWO0DS( svvss; 740 Market Street and 3 i Cor. Powell and Eady " -N7AE fslem

Other pages from this issue: